Excellent. I just have one question, and then I'll be sharing my time with my colleague Ms. Nassif.
Thank you for being with us today. Your testimony is very interesting and very important.
My question is for Ms. Bakopanos.
On the issue of quotas, you mentioned that personally you support them. We heard at great length during our economic study that the 30% threshold is where the conversation changes and it makes a meaningful difference. Companies make more money, and governments could make better decisions. There's an interesting sort of butting of heads between two ideas here.
How can we empower governments by having women cross that 30% threshold, without disenfranchising voters, whether it's people who vote in their nomination contests or voters who elect the candidate of their choice? I'm supremely interested in seeing us reach parity in the House of Commons. I think it would change everything about politics, but I also don't want to compromise the will of the electorate to choose their local representatives.
Do you have a suggestion on how we might marry these two interests?